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  2. She began to write her autobiography, as she expected her life to end. [62] Completing the book rapidly in three months, [ 54 ] she postponed its publication until after her death, and lived another two decades.

  3. Martineau lost her hearing early in life and later had heart disease and other illnesses. Her candid Autobiography, edited by Maria Weston Chapman, was published posthumously (3 vol., 1877).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Her lively and provocative Autobiography was written in 1855 but published posthumously in 1877. Despite two extended periods of ill-health, from 1839 10 1844, and from 1855 until her death, the last phase of Harriet Martineau’s career was as a journalist primarily for The Daily News (though she wrote for many other journals and papers]. She ...

  5. Dec 29, 2020 · The most prominent source to know about Martineau’s life is her ‘Autobiography’ which was written in 1855. It was later published posthumously in 1877 together with Maria Chapman’s ‘ Memorials of Harriet Martineau ’.

  6. Harriet Martineau (1802–1876) was a British writer who was one of the first social theorists to examine all aspects of a society, including class, religion, national character and the status of women. These volumes, first published in 1877, contain Martineau's unusual autobiography.

    • Harriet Martineau, Maria Weston Chapman
    • 1877
  7. Feb 3, 2020 · Born in 1802 in England, Harriet Martineau is considered to be one of the earliest sociologists, a self-taught expert in political economic theory who wrote prolifically throughout her career about the relationship between politics, economics, morals, and social life.

  8. Aug 1, 2019 · Harriet Martineau wrote her Autobiography in 1855 after being diagnosed with a heart condition. It was published after her death at her home in the Lake District in 1877.

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